17-09-2016, 03:30 AM
(17-09-2016, 03:17 AM)ThomasCoon Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view....
Thomas wrote:
This is wonderful work, Searcher!I think you have made a wonderful argument for a null character, possibly <q>!
At one time I also wondered if there is a null character (or null characters) in the text. I didn't focus on <q> but I wondered if <o> and <e> were the nulls, because they are often interchangeable, and there are versions of the same strings with different numbers of <e>'s and <o>'s (and you have noticed this also). Here are examples from my notes, if this helps:
qo-ko--dyqoted-y
qo-ke--dyqoted-y
qo-kee-dyqoted-y
qo-te--dyqoted-y
qo-tee-dyqoted-y
op-she-dyqoted-y
op-che-dyqoted-y
op-ch--dyqoted-y
she-dyqoted-y
sh--dyqoted-y
aiin-che-dyqoted-y-
aiin-ch--dyqoted-y-
However, my observation does not explain why <qol> words can also have <ol> counterparts.![]()
I also don't know "whether they are only two real word combinations or all these in their distinctions," but my guess is that some characters are repeated to disguise the text, in the same way that we have <ain, aiin, aiiin>.
Nick Pelling posted this example of two strings that repeat on page 84r (this is the longest repeating text in the VMS), and one way that they differ is the number of <e> characters:
<f84r.P.3> shedy qokedy qokeedy qokedy chedy okain chey
<f84r.P.10> shedy qokedy qokeedy qokeedy chedy raiin chey
(You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.).
So I agree with you - something looks like it may be a null
I'm doubtful that 4/4o is a null. Why add null to only specific kinds of words? Nulls are intended to obscure not elaborate.
I'm not yet sure what it is, even though I can predict and trace many of the 4o vords, but... I suspect it's a designator.